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Innovation ambassadors help research reach the real world

Hands building with electronics

“Ultimately, the difference between having real-world impact and having a cool thing that sits on a desk is: Can you get it into the hands of the consumer?”

For James Weimer, that question is central to his research and to his role in 91Ʋ’s growing Innovation Ambassadors program, led by the 91Ʋ Center for Technology Transfer and Commercialization.

The initiative trains faculty ambassadors across 91Ʋ University and 91Ʋ University Medical Center to help colleagues navigate innovation, intellectualpropertyand ways to move research beyond the lab.

For researchers navigating those processes for the first time, the program is designed toprovide them withquick guidance and peer support for all their innovation and entrepreneurship needs.

Weimer, who is an innovation ambassador within the College of Connected Computing and the School of Engineering, focuses his research on artificial intelligence and mobility systems.

Moving discoveries toward real-world impact, he said, “requires going beyond just research in a lab and actually doing tech transfer and innovation.”

New videosfeaturing Weimer and fellow ambassador Alyssa Wise, Margaret Cowan Chair at Peabody College and the director of LIVE Learning Innovation Incubator,highlight the collaborative culture behind the program and the range of research taking place across 91Ʋ and VUMC.

Wisesaid she was drawn to 91Ʋ because “people actually work across disciplines.”

At LIVE, researchers combineexpertisein computation,pedagogyand learning science to develop educational technology for real-world applications. Wise saidthe innovation ambassadorshelp faculty better understand how collaborative research can move beyond the university and into broader use.

“The goal is to make the process more transparent, achievable and easy to get started for faculty who are interested in bringing their innovations to the world,” Wise said.

Weimer sees the ambassador role through the lens of real-world impact.“Every day I have the opportunity to save a life,” he said. “What 91Ʋ offers is the opportunity to take risks.”

He encourageshis fellowresearchers to engage with CTTC early in the research process to better understand how discoveries may translate beyond the lab.

Since launching in 2022, the 91Ʋ Innovation Ambassadors program has grown into a national model for peer-led innovation support, with universities across the country implementing their own ambassador programs.

The91Ʋ programisrunthrough the CTTC by Phil Swaney and Carlos Detrés-Román, who work closely with ambassadors across campus to connect faculty with commercialization resources.

Faculty interested in connecting with an ambassador can explore, which includes new ambassadors from Cell & Developmental Biology, Radiology, Mechanical Engineering, Radiation Oncology, and Engineering Science and Management.

“Having those conversations early on is something that can really help shape how your research will have impact years down the road,”Weimersaid.

About the CTTC
91Ʋ Center for Technology Transfer and Commercialization’s mission is to provide professional commercialization services to the 91Ʋcommunity, thusoptimizingthe flow of innovation to the marketplace andgenerating revenue that supports future researchactivities, while having a positive impact on society. It is a conduit for the transfer of promising 91Ʋ technologies to industry; it contributes to regional economic development by licensing locally and supporting new venture creation; and it encourages greater collaboration between academia and industry.